Tuesday, December 24, 2024

T. Rex - Electric Warrior (1971 uk, glam boogie rock landmark, 2003 SACD and 2012 double disc remaster)



 A self-proclaimed “cosmic dancer”, who DJ John Peel nicknamed the “flower child with a knife up his sleeve”, Marc Bolan never suffered from a deficit of self-belief. “You play a C major chord and I hear 25 melodies and symphonies… it gushes out of me,” he once boasted of what he deemed super-human songwriting abilities. With his second album as T.Rex, the androgynous glitter-flecked pixie superstar could lay claim to inventing glam rock.

Electric Warrior was certainly the first glam album to top the UK charts, spending eight weeks at No.1 after its release in September 1971. Despite the unrefined 50s rock’n’roll fundamentals of Bolan’s riffing and the occasionally nonsensical mysticism of his lyrics, here was a revolutionary record that altered the course of rock history, unleashing a glam wave that would be surfed by David Bowie, Slade, Mott The Hoople et al deep into the 70s.

Despite his boundless confidence, the path to stardom was not without obstacles for Bolan (born Mark Feld). Initially a mod, his early adventures displayed a fascination with Bob Dylan – his first acetate, under the name Toby Tyler, included a cover of Blowin’ In The Wind, and he delivered his folky incantations with an acoustic guitar, sat cross-legged on the floor.

The full debut Marc Bolan single (featuring both Jimmy Page and Big Jim Sullivan) was tellingly called The Wizard and in 1967, Bolan formed acoustic duo Tyrannosaurus Rex with Steve Peregrin Took. Yet it was only when he ditched Took and the acoustic, shortening the band’s name to T.Rex, that Bolan’s career ignited. The new band’s debut single, Ride A White Swan “inadvertently founded glam rock mania,” claimed AllMusic’s Ned Ragett.

Bolan was by now playing a late-60s Olympic White Fender Strat with rosewood fingerboard and Ride A White Swan was a No.2 hit in January 1971, only kept off the top by Clive Dunn’s mawkish novelty record Grandad. With the wind now in Bolan’s sails, Hot Love and the lusty Get It On both climbed one position higher, at their peak each selling around 60,000 copies a day as Bolan prepared to roll out his first great album. It was the moment, wrote Chris Jones of BBC Music, that the Tolkien-obsessed troubadour took “the hippy-dippy lyrics and Larry the lamb vocal stylings and bolted them on to good old stripped-down, four-to-the-floor rock’n’roll.”

Bolan’s guitar odyssey began at the age of 12. A hungry consumer of Little Richard, Eddie Cochran and James Burton riffs, he later became obsessed with Eric Clapton and Jimi Hendrix. While he never developed technical chops in the same league as either of those pioneers, Bolan was an under-appreciated player who was brave enough to venture outside of existing pentatonic frameworks. Among his many A-list fans, Paul Weller has praised his style as “really unique… you know his sound instantly” and you can hear T.Rex’s influence on everyone from Prince to Primal Scream – not least Noel Gallagher, who pilfered the riff from Get It On for 1994 Oasis single Cigarettes & Alcohol.

Perhaps best placed to appraise Bolan’s guitar playing was his trusted producer Tony Visconti, who helmed Electric Warrior. Visconti believes Bolan is “criminally underrated”. He told Performing Songwriter: “Marc was a very innocent guitarist, and sometimes he would play very strange things. In his mind he might be playing a blues lick, but it might not have the flatted 3rd, or something would be not bluesy about it.” Rather than try to correct these idiosyncrasies, on Electric Warrior Visconti embraced Bolan’s excursions outside the box, instructing the strings section he’d enlisted to double his parts.

By the time he recorded Electric Warrior in New York and LA between tour dates, Bolan’s Strat had been joined by a Gibson Flying V and his famous ‘Frankenstein’ Les Paul, bought in 1970 and believed to be a 50s Goldtop. The guitar had already been fitted with at least one replacement neck and was refinished in a translucent orange hue its owner called ‘Bolan Chablis’, a nod to Cochran’s Gretsch 6120.

Driven from the outset by Bolan’s chugging boogie, Electric Warrior will always be remembered best for its singles. Get It On’s raunchy palm-muted powerchord shuffle in E is one of the most memorable riffs of all time. Borrowing from Chuck Berry’s Little Queenie, the wanton Les Paul into Marshall snarl is augmented by Blue Weaver’s electrifying piano glissando and romping saxophone interjections from King Crimson’s Ian McDonald. It’s pure sexuality, Bolan purring “you’re an untamed youth… you’re dirty, sweet and you’re my girl”.

Number two hit Jeepster, based loosely on Howlin’ Wolf’s You’ll Be Mine, is littered with barely veiled sexual metaphors and propelled by an insistent blues groove in A, with the chorus shifting into C. “I don’t sing the old rock’n’roll songs myself. I prefer to change the words and make new songs out of them. That’s all Jeepster is,” Bolan admitted of his mining of rock’n’roll history.

The thick dropped-pitch riffs and solos exploding around the simple G/D/A minor acoustic progression on the single’s flipside Life’s A Gas are typical of Bolan’s intrepid lead approach, and its pained opening couplet “I could have loved you girl, like a planet/ I could have chained your heart to a star” is sublime universal romanticism.

Away from the chart hits, Visconti’s string arrangements imbue Electric Warrior with greater depth. Just listen to the way Cosmic Dancer is elevated by the contributions of some 20 orchestral players, their dramatic cello stabs and shimmying violin phrases darting through the mix before Bolan’s otherworldly reversed soloing bestrides the outro.

Somewhat less urbane, The Motivator is Bolan covering himself – recycling the melodies from Get It On, with the addition of some bongos, and gushing “I love the clothes you wear/ they’re so mean, so free, they’re so handsome.”

Released on 24 September, 1971, Electric Warrior ruled the UK album chart for eight weeks. “I feel as though I could go on writing number ones forever,” a typically assured Bolan told Record Mirror. “The majority of pop hits are a permutation on the twelve-bar blues and I’ve found one that works.”

Yet despite their adoration at home, T.Rex were never embraced in the US, where Bolan was met with cool indifference. According to Visconti, it was down to a perception that he wasn’t a “serious” musician. “Marc wasn’t the world’s best guitarist,” he told Performing Songwriter. “People saw something not genuine in him, the American public and media didn’t take him seriously.”

John Peel, so supportive of Bolan’s early career, was unimpressed that he’d abandoned psychedelic folk in search of chart success, but the importance of Electric Warrior is inarguable. Al Spicer nails it in the Rough Guide To Rock, describing “Teenage music at its best. Trashy, sleazy drug-induced nonsense, screamed as if it were the meaning of life.”

Alas, such vertiginous highs would be short-lived. T.Rex repeated the success of Electric Warrior with 1972’s strong follow-up The Slider, but by the middle of the decade the shine of Bolan’s satin-draped glam pomp had dulled. In 1977, he was living in the US with Gloria Jones and planning a bid to relaunch his career when the couple were involved in a car crash that ended his life. There’s a strange poignancy in the incongruous, sombre cello sweep that concludes Electric Warrior and the sadly unfulfilled words from one of its most memorable tracks: “It really doesn’t matter at all/ life’s a gas/ I hope it’s gonna last.”
by Gary Walker, September 08, 2021 
Tracks
SACD 2003
1. Mambo Sun - 3:39
2. Cosmic Dancer - 4:28
3. Jeepster - 4:10
4. Monolith - 3:47
5. Lean Woman Blues - 2:58
6. Get It On - 4:25
7. Planet Queen - 3:11
8. Girl - 2:31
9. The Motivator - 3:58
10.Life's A Gas - 2:23
11.Rip Off - 3:40
All songs written by Marc Bolan
40th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition 2012
Disc 1
1. Mambo Sun - 3:36
2. Cosmic Dancer - 4:26
3. Jeepster - 4:07
4. Monolith - 3:45
5. Lean Woman Blues - 2:59
6. Get It On - 4:22
7. Planet Queen - 3:10
8. Girl - 2:29
9. The Motivator - 3:56
10.Life's A Gas - 2:23
11.Rip Off - 3:49
12.There Was A Time / Raw Ramp - 5:14
13.Hot Love - 4:55
14.Woodland Rock - 2:26
15.The King Of The Mountain Cometh - 3:53
Tracks 1-11 The Original Album
Tracks 12-15 Singles 'A' & 'B' Sides
Disc 2  Demos & Out-Takes Previously Unreleased
1. Electric Warrior Poem - 0:21
2. Mambo Sun - 3:49
3. Cosmic Dancer - 4:26
4. Jeepster - 4:18
5. Monolith - 2:23
6. Lean Woman Blues - 3:05
7. Get It On - 5:48
8. Planet Queen - 2:56
9. Girl - 2:29
10.The Motivator - 3:57
11.Life's A Gas - 3:32
12.Rip Off - 3:18
13.Raw Ramp - 2:21
14.Electric Boogie - 2:06
15.Untitled Instrumental Aka A Lot Of Rubbish - 1:35
16.Honey Don't - 3:23
17.Planet Queen - 2:25
18.Girl - 0:38
19.Jeepster - 2:34
20.Get It On - 3:15
21.Electric Warrior Poem And Radio Advert - 0:55
All compositions by Marc Bolan

T.Rex
*Marc Bolan - Vocals, Guitar
*Mickey Finn - Congas, Bongos, Vocals
*Steve Currie - Bass
*Bill Legend - Drums
With
*Howard Kaylan - Backing Vocals
*Mark Volman - Backing Vocals
*Rick Wakeman - Keyboards On "Get It On"
*Ian McDonald - Saxophone, Vocals
*Burt Collins - Flugelhorn, Vocals
*Flo & Eddie - Vocals

Related Acts

Monday, December 23, 2024

Michael de Albuquerque - We May Be Cattle But We've All Got Names (1973 uk, elegant art prog funk jazz rock, 2024 bonus track remaster)



The bass player and vocalist for classical rock band, Electric Light Orchestra from 1973 to 1974, Michael D'Albuquerquehas continued to explore the furthest realms of his music. His two solo albums, We May All Be Cattle But We've All Got Names, released in 1973, and Stalking The Sleeper, released three years later, are masterpieces of early progressive rock.

D'Albuquerque's most ambitious outing may have been the short-lived group, Violinksi,featuring Electric Light Orchestra violinist Michael Kaminski, John Hodgson and John Marcancelo. Replacing founding bass player Baz Dunnery in 1978, D'Albuquerque was featured on the band's debut album, Discovery. A top twenty hit in the UK, the album was released solely as a promo in North America. The album was finally released in the United States, in 1982, under the title, Whirling Dervish. D'Albuquerque also played an important role on Violinski's second album, Stop Claning About, released in 1980. The lead singer on half of the tracks, he wrote three tunes on the album. 
by Craig Harris
Tracks
1. Dribble Dribble - 5:22
2. Oh Woman - 6:12
3. Occasion - 5:04
4. We May Be Cattle But We've All Got Names - 4:22
5. Do Right - 4:54
6. My Darling Girl - 4:07
7. Sweet Mirth - 5:57
8. Catharsis - 6:26 
9. Lonely - 3:29
All compositions by Michael de Albuquerque
Bonus Track 9

Musicians
*Michael d'Albuquerque - Guitar, Keyboards, Vocals
*Ollie Halsall - Guitar, Keyboards, Vocals
*Alan Skidmore - Saxophone
*B.J. Cole - Steel Guitar 
*Brian Bennett - Drums
*Chris Laurence - Bass
*Chris Pine - Trombone
*David Katz - Orchestra Contractor, Violin
*Frank Ricotti - Percussion
*Gerry Conway - Drums
*Gordon Beck - Keyboards
*Henry Lowther - Trumpet
*John Taylor - Keyboards
*John Uckeridge - Trumpet
*Robin Sylvester - Bass
*Stan Sulzmann - Saxophone

Related Act

Saturday, December 21, 2024

Aztec Two-Step - Two's Company (1976 us, excellent jazzy bluesy folk rock)



The third album by the Boston-bred duo of singer/guitarists Rex Fowler and Neal Shulman is something of a retrenchment after their over-produced RCA debut, Second Step. In keeping with the stripped-down album title, producer Mark Abramson sets the songs in less-slick surroundings, keeping the duo's trademark harmonies front and center at all times with subtle piano, pedal steel, and percussion accents that never hog too much of the spotlight. Fowler and Shulman step up with a stronger collection of songs than before, highlighted by the rueful, almost Neil Young-like "Isn't It Sweet to Think So" and a soulful pop/rocker, "Loving Game," that wouldn't sound out of place on one of Todd Rundgren's poppier albums. Their debut is still their best effort, but Two's Company comes close.
by Stewart Mason
Tracks
1. Dance - 4:49
2. Finding Somebody New - 3:48
3. A Conversation In A Car - 4:00
4. Isn't It Sweet To Think So - 3:07
5. Pajama Party (Billy Mernit) - 2:22
6. Give It Away - 3:38
7. Penthouse (Jake Jacobs) - 2:19
8. Whiskey Man - 3:17
9. You've Got A Way (Neal Shulman) - 2:12
10.Loving Game - 2:50
11.Where'd Our Love Go (Jon M. Dermody, Rex Fowler) - 5:30
All songs by Rex Fowler except where noted

Musicians
*Neal Shulman - Guitar, Vocals
*Rex Fowler - Guitar, Vocals
*George Young - Alto Saxophone (Track 1)
*Jeff Layton - Electric Guitar (Tracks 2,10)
*The Family Jewels - Backing Vocals  (Tracks 5,7)
*Anthony Jackson - Bass (Tracks 7,9,11), 
*Bob Babbitt - Bass (Tracks 3,4,6,8), 
*Victor Venegas - Bass (Tracks 2,10), 
*Will Lee - Bass (Tracks 1,5)
*John Rodriguez - Congas (Tracks 2,10)
*José Madera - Congas (Track 8)
*Gary Mure Drums (Tracks 1-8,1011)
*Jerry Matthews - Electric Guitar (Track 1) 
*Steve Khan - Electric Guitar (Tracks 3,4,6,11)
*Gonzolo Fernandez - Flute (Track 2)
*Warren Bernhardt Organ (Track 11)
*José Madera - Percussion (Tracks 2,10)
*Michael Collazo - Percussion (Tracks 2,10)
*Billy Merritt - Piano (Track 5) 
*Ken Ascher - Piano (Tracks 1,6,8) 
*Pat Rebillot - Piano (Track 3)
*Joe Shepley - Piccolo Trumpet (Track 1)
*Paul Faulise - Trombone (Track 1) 
*Sam Burtis - Trombone (Track 1) 
*Tom Malone - Trombone (Track 1) 
*Tony Studd - Trombone (Track 1)
*Burt Collins - Trumpet (Track 1) 
*Jon Faddis - Trumpet (Track 1) 
*Robert Millikan - Trumpet (Track 1)


Thursday, December 19, 2024

Sympathy - As Long As We Can See (1974 holland, pleasant glam classic rock)



Sympathy is the name of the band from Deventer Holland, and started out in1972 with the single “Aint It Nice-Everday's Someday”. Consisting of Jan Pieter Boekhoorn, Organ-Piano he used to be part of the Tee Set and became known mainly for his hit composition 'Tea is Famous”, Will Matla, guitar player who comes from the accompaniment group of Marianne Nobel, Ruud v. Seventer on bass the hairy bassist who made his first steps in music with the formation The Zipps, Simon Matla, drums the 19-year-old benjamin of the group and comes from 'Daddy's Act' and thein singer and songwriter Geo Dijkhuis, with a very impressive voice

“Sympathy” a very hard-working group, recorded their only one LP “As Long As We Can See” in The Hague Sound, Haarlem Electronics, sometime between 18 and 28 of march 1974. Produced by Hans Vermeulen and the band members. With some line-up changes they released few singles before splitting in the second half of the seventies.
Tracks
1. Rock 'n' Roll Man (Will Matla, George Dijkhuis) - 3:50
2. Scattered Dreams And Flowers - 5:38 
3. If Music Be The Flood Of Love (Jan Pieter Boekhoorn, George Dijkhuis) - 3:49 
4. Thinking Only Leads To Drinking - 2:58 
5. We Can Make A Date (Jan Pieter Boekhoorn, George Dijkhuis) - 5:04
6. Back By Fall - 2:44 
7. Better View (Simon Matla) - 4:36
8. Don't Press Your Nails In My Eyes - 3:33
9. As Long As I Can See - 5:38
10.Ain't It Nice (Harry Vanda, George Young) - 3:24
11.Everyday's Someday - 2:08
12.Music Music Music (Stephan Weiss, Bernie Baum) - 2:28
13.Forever - 3:54
14.Don't Press Your Nails In My Eyes - 3:35
15.Good Man - 2:39
16.Love You (Will Matla, George Dijkhuis) - 3:09 
17.Life Is Meant To Live For - 3:55
All songs by George Dijkhuis except where indicated

Sympathy
*George Dijkhuis - Vocals
*Will Matla - Guitar, Backing Vocals
*Jan Pieter Boekhoorn - Keyboards
*Simon Matla - Percussion
*Ruud van Seventer - Bass  (1972- 1974)
*André Reijnen - Bass (1974-1976)
*Jody Pijper - Lead Vocals (Track 16)


Wednesday, December 18, 2024

The Original Animals - Before We Were So Rudely Interrupted (1977 uk, fine bluesy classic rock, 2000 remaster)



Cut 11 years after the Animals' original lineup recorded their last LP and six years before their more well-remembered reunion tour, this oft-overlooked album is just short of a lost classic; it lacks the intensity of their 1983 studio effort, Ark, but it is more substantial musically than that album and fits in very neatly with their preceding work, as though they'd scarcely skipped a beat. Recorded under the auspices of the late Chas Chandler's Barn Productions, the album was highlighted by a dramatically bluesy rendition of "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue," boasting superb playing by Alan Price. 

Hilton Valentine's soaring guitar pyrotechnics light up "Fire on the Sun," perhaps the flashiest performance of his career for this most introspective of '60s British blues axemen, and "As the Crow Flies" has the group returning to its roots, as a dark, brooding rendition of the Jimmy Reed song that gives room for Chandler, Valentine, Price, and John Steel to show off their '60s-era blues chops in a more expansive form. After a promising start, the gospel number "Many Rivers to Cross" falls apart a bit, but "Just a Little Bit," with its rippling organ break, the group original "Riverside County," and the pounding finale, "The Fool," make the rest of side two eminently enjoyable, although, coming out in the midst of the punk and disco booms, the LP never had a chance to be heard by more than the most dedicated fans. 
by Bruce Eder
Tracks
1. Brother Bill (The Last Clean Shirt) (Clyde Otis, Jerry Leiber, Mike Stoller) - 3:19
2. It's All Over Now, Baby Blue (Bob Dylan) - 4:42
3. Fire On The Sun (Shakey Jake) - 2:25
4. As The Crow Flies (Jimmy Reed) - 3:39
5. Please Send Me Someone To Love (Percy Mayfield) - 4:44
6. Many Rivers To Cross (Jimmy Cliff) - 4:11
7. Just A Little Bit (Earl Washington, John Thornton, Piney Brown, Ralph Bass, Sylvester Thompson) - 2:07
8. Riverside County (Alan Price, Chas Chandler, Eric Burdon, Hilton Valentine, John Steel) - 3:47
9. Lonely Avenue (Doc Pomus) - 5:22
10.The Fool (Sanford Clark) - 3:24

The Animals 
*Eric Burdon - Vocals
*Hilton Valentine - Guitar
*Alan Price - Keyboards
*Chas Chandler - Bass
*John Steel - Drums

1964-67  The Animals - The Complete French EP (ten disc edition)
1966  The Animals - Animalism (2014 remaster and expanded)
1967  Eric Is Here
1967  Winds of Change (2013 Double SHM CD)

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Bulldog - Smasher (1974 us, nice pop rock tunes from Rascals members)



When the Rascals broke up in 1972, guitarist Gene Cornish and drummer Dino Danelli wasted little time putting together another band.

For the unaware, the Rascals — who were initially called the Young Rascals — held sway as one of the greatest groups of the 1960s. Hailing from Long Island, New York, the band collected a cluster of shiny gold nuggets, including “Good Lovin’,” “I’ve Been Lonely Too Long,” “Groovin’,” “How Can I Be Sure,” “It’s a Beautiful Morning,” and “People Got to be Free,” that keenly mixed punchy rock arrangements with a smooth soul slant.

And so, shortly after the Rascals ceased to be, Gene Cornish and Dino Danelli joined forces with lead singer and bassist Billy Hocher, guitarist Eric Thorngren and keyboardist John Turi, resulting in the birth of Bulldog. The band’s self-titled debut album, produced by Gene and Dino, suggested they were off to a very promising start. Dominated by a loose and lively party vibe, Bulldog (Decca Records) stomped and swaggered with the raunchiest of the lot.

Smasher, Bulldog’s second album, appeared in 1974 on the Buddah label, and although credible moments were to be had, sales were weak and the band was then laid to rest. Come 1978, Gene Cornish and Dino Danelli connected with ex-Raspberries guitarist Wally Bryson and formed Fotomaker, and they experienced a brief burst of fame with their brand of slick power pop.

Hammering the point home with funky frills and boogie woogie rhythms, Bulldog steps in as a classic example of early-’70s blues-rocking soul. To be played loud for maximum effects, here’s an album worth checking out.
by Beverly Paterson, November 22, 2015 
Tracks
1. Flamingo (Eric Thorngen, Billy Hocher) - 4:16
2. Are You Really Happy Together (Eric Thorngen, John Turi, Billy Hocher) - 2:43
3. Honeymoon Couple (Eric Thorngen, Billy Hocher) - 2:23
4. Bad Bad Girl (Eric Thorngen, John Turi, Billy Hocher) - 2:18
5. Brown Eyed Handsome Man (Chuck Berry) - 2:42
6. We Had A Real Good Time (Dan Hartman, Edgar Winter) - 3:28
7. Ooh When You Smile (Eric Thorngen, John Turi, Billy Hocher) - 2:39
8. Rock 'n' Roll Hootchi Coo (Rick Derringer) - 4:55
9. I Tip My Hat (Eric Thorngen, John Turi, Billy Hocher) - 2:27
10.I Tried To Sleep (Eric Thorngen) - 4:07

Bulldog
*Gene Cornish - Rhythm Guitar
*Dino Danelli - Drums, Percussion
*Billy Hocher - Lead Vocals, Bass
*Eric Thorngen - Lead Guitar
*John Turi - Vocals, Keyboards, Saxophone

Related Act
1969  The Rascals - See (Japan remaster)
1971  The Rascals - Peaceful World (Japan remaster)
1972  The Rascals - Island Of Real (Sundazed issue)
1965-72  The Rascals - Anthology (double disc)
1967  The Young Rascals - Groovin'  (2007 remastered and expanded)

Monday, December 16, 2024

Eric Burdon And The Animals - Every One Of Us (1968 uk, superb psych rock, 2013 SHM 2004 bonus tracks remaster)



A lot of blues have gone under their musical bridge in the four years since the Animals first exploded on the pop music scene–blues musical and personal. A dozen sidemen have come and gone, the billing was changed to read "Eric Burdon and the Animals," they stopped recording blues classics preferring to present original material, and where once this young English mining town tough was the critics' darling and voted the best white male blues singer in the business, he now is relegated to a position somewhere in the Siberia of Teenybopperland.

Burdon has also changed personally. Once upon a time he was remote and uptight. Today he is friendly and relaxed. The ego you think might have dictated the changes in billing and personnel is, if present, not apparent. So it is not difficult to ask Burdon, quite bluntly: What happened?

"I got changes to go through and I've got to go through them," he said recently, between out-of-town concert gigs. "If I worried about what people said in the beginning, I'd never have done anything. When I was still in school I said Ray Charles and Bo Diddley were where it's at, not Bobby Vee. So after a while I was right, and blues was right. Then, later, when I did something else, they came to me and said I should be doing blues and not Ravi Shankar and 'Sky Pilot'."

He made this short speech with conviction, but without anger. "It took Don Ellis ten years to get his band together where it is now," he added. "When I think of that I know I've got plenty of time. "You know, I can still walk out on any stage and get a good reaction The record business can take second place to that. Performing for people is where it's at. I guess I find it difficult to connect through a record."

Burdon has a home in Laurel Canyon in Los Angeles now and it is this city he uses as a base for his far-ranging, continuing concert tours. There is a new album out–Every One of Us, the band's tenth–and there are certain to be several more, but it is the stage act Burdon seems to believe in.

"If you get hung up in a studio, you lose people," he said. "If you live in a castle, you can't take a walk on the Sunset Strip. I think the Stones are finding this out right now. I think the Beatles may learn the same thing. You got to be out in front of the people.

"The English critics thought 'Sky Pilot' was bad when they listened to the record, but they liked it in the stage show. You got to see it with the film and the light show to know what we are talking about. "You see, I can't get it out of my head every time I make a record I'm making a documentary movie, and records you can only listen to. You can't see them. What we really are, right now, is a stage act."

Eric Burdon and the Animals travel with a light show team and currently there are four films included in the presentation, so it is not surprising when Burdon defends visuals. "The best way to communicate is to make a movie," he said. "No one will let me make a film now, just like when I started out I couldn't make a record; no one would let me get into a studio. That's okay. I'll keep on making records until someone lets me make a film, and then I'll stand on people's fingers with what I do.

"Film is the medium. If people have eyes as well as ears, records only half-satisfy." Why has Burdon abandoned the blues classics that were so good to him? "I haven't, really. Not altogether. I still do some of me old things in the stage act occasionally. I still sing blues, even if they are original. Most of the new album is our own stuff, but 'St. James Infirmary' is in there. Besides, I did all that before. Why do it again?"

(It's a pallid rendition of "St. James Infirmary" the Animals provide on this album, sharing the second side with a 19-minute-long "documentary" called "New York 1963–America 1968," which might best be described as Burdon's latest sophomoric attempt to convince us his soul is black. The first side is somewhat less offensive, although it features, for elusive reasons, "The Immigrant Lad," running 6:15 and being little more than a seagull track with intruments and a mundane conversation between Engish workingmen. The album was produced by the band, Tom Wilson having gone on to other things. It is not a collector's "must.")

As shy and uptight as Burdon was in 1964 when "House of the Rising Sun" was a hit, even then he was outspoken. He is no less honest today, and some of the things he says are the sort that send record biz execs running for drink.

About drugs and booze: "I usually don't go on stage unless I am stoned out of me head. Or after drinking half a bottle of scotch. I've decided there's nothing like dope . . . booze . . . meditation . . . anything to get high."

About his record company: "Stanley Kubrick gets $15 million and doesn't have to show one foot of film to MGM for three weeks, and I can't get them to put a billboard on the Strip to advertise me records."

About London: "The whole city has gone homosexual. All me friends have gone bent. They're freaking out . . . looking for something to do, I guess."

Burdon made several small speeches in a short period of time. There was no uptightness, no matter how strong the opinions. The man had been relaxed. He grinned when he talked. He was, like too many others in his field, talking too much about film and paying too little attention to music. But he was exceptionally likeable. "Meanwhile," he said, finishing one of his small speeches, "it's off to Portland for a gig. We are but strolling minstrels."

Also meanwhile (and a week following the interview) two of his guitarist-bass players, Vic Briggs and Danny MeCulloch, left the group. Briggs was replaced by Andy Somers, formerly with the Soft Machine and Zoot Money's group before Money joined the Animals. McCulloch, who already has cut an album with a new group, has not been replaced.
by Jerry Hopkins, September 14, 1968
Tracks
1. White House - 3:51
2. Uppers And Downers - 0:26
3. Serenade To A Sweet Lady (Johnny Weider) - 6:16
4. The Immigrant Lad - 6:17
5. Year Of The Guru - 5:25
6. St. James Infirmary (Traditional) - 5:03
7. New York 1963 America 1968 (Eric Burdon, Zoot Money) - 18:52
All songs by Eric Burdon except where noted
Bonus Track on 2013 SHM Japan
8. White House (Eric Burdon) - 3:03
Bonus Tracks on 2004 Repertoire edition
8. River Deep, Mountain High (Jeff Barry, Phil Spector) - 3:52
9. White House (Eric Burdon) - 3:03

The Animals
*Eric Burdon - Vocals
*Vic Briggs - Guitar, Bass
*John Weider - Guitar, Celeste
*Zoot Money (Aka George Bruno) - Hammond Organ, Vocals, Piano
*Danny McCulloch - Bass, Vocals, 12-String Guitar
*Barry Jenkins - Drums

1964-67  The Animals - The Complete French EP (ten disc edition)
1966  The Animals - Animalism (2014 remaster and expanded)
1967  Eric Is Here
1967  Winds of Change (2013 Double SHM CD)
1968  The Twain Shall Meet (2013 Japan SHM)

Saturday, December 14, 2024

Isaac Guillory - Isaac Guillory (1974 us, fine folk bluesy rock)



Born 27 February 1947, US Navy Base, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, died 31 December 2000, England. Having played piano and guitar from childhood, Guillory first explored the electric guitar while in Florida, playing with the Illusions. Moving to Chicago in 1965, he studied Theory and Composition at Roosevelt University. He joined the Chicago-based pop outfit the Cryan’ Shames in 1967 as bass player, and recorded two albums with them before leaving in 1969. In 1970 Guillory left the USA in order to travel. He made his British debut at the Cambridge Folk Festival in 1971, when he was invited to accompany Al Stewart. Having earned a growing reputation as a session musician, Guillory was signed by Atlantic Records to a solo contract in 1973 - his self-titled debut appeared the following year. 

Continuing as a session musician, he appeared on albums such as Tall Tree by Peter Sarstedt, Past, Present And Future by Al Stewart, and Two Days Away by Elkie Brooks. Proving his versatility, Guillory went on to play on albums by the jazz fusion band Pacific Eardrum (replacing guitarist Big Jim Sullivan on two 70s collections), Donovan, Buggles, Barbara Dickson (for whom he became musical director) and Nick Heyward. He pursued a solo career from 1986, touring the UK, USA, Europe and Canada. In addition to being a guest lecturer during the Guildhall School Of Music’s summer programme, Guillory also wrote all the musical information in The Guitar Handbook by Ralph Denyer - a definitive textbook which served as the inspiration for the BBC television series, Rock School. He also accompanied Joan Baez in a televised concert in France and toured with both John Renbourn and Pierre Bensusan. 

Despite not achieving commercial success in his own right, Guillory thrived in the live environment, remaining a much in demand virtuoso performer. His death from cancer in December 2000 robbed the music world of a great talent. 
All Music
Tracks
1. St. Peter - 4:19  
2. Staying Awhile (Virginia Clemens) - 2:12   
3. Brusselles - 2:46 
4. Steamboat - 3:20
5. Sidewalks Of America (Geoff Boyan) - 3:12 
6. The Carbondale Strutt - 2:57 
7. Movin' On - 2:37 
8. Ice Cream Phoenix (Charles Cockey, Jorma Kaukonen) - 4:06
9.  El Jadida - 4:35 
10.Karma Blues (Jim Carey) - 1:48
All songs by Isaac Guillory except where noted

Musicians
*Isaac Guillory - Vocals, Guitars, Bass, Mellotron, Arp 
*Pete Gavin - Drums (Track 1)
*Jim Carey - Drums (Tracks 2,8,10)  
*Roger Pope  - Drums (Track 5)
*Fred Gandy - Bass (Tracks 1,5,7) 
*Jim Cole - Bass (Tracks 8,10)
*Mox - Harp (Tracks 1,7)
*Jim Fairs - Acoustic Guitar (Track 5)
*Jim Fairs - Electric Guitar, Dulcimer (Track 8)
*Johnse Holt - Electric Guitar (Track 8)
*Sam Gopal - Tablas (Tracks 7,8,9)
*Cathy Hall - Flute (Track 8)
*Jim Cole - Vocals (Track 10)

Related Act

Friday, December 13, 2024

Marvelous Kid - After The Race (1973 uk, fantastic fusion prog rock, 2024 digi sleeve)



Marvelous Kid formed in 1970 when drummer Paul Moon and guitarist Tony Coxon met keyboard player/singer Steve Betts in the St. Austell Bay area of Cornwall. The band started gigging as a three piece, playing covers as well as some of their own material. After a few months they had gathered a loyal following and were joined by celebrated local musician Spike Hooper on tenor sax. Their reputation as an original and inventive band started to grow and was given a further boost when they won a South West Best Band competition in 1970. The prize, a recording session at Decca studios in West Hampstead and a new Laney PA system, enabled them to consolidate and continue developing their own material. Soon the band were gigging all over the south west of England, headlining and supporting various name bands, their continuing success culminating in a performance at the 1971 Glastonbury Fayre. 

At the end of that year Steve moved to London where he joined Grannie, another unsung prog band of the period, as lead singer, while Paul, Tony and Spike continued playing in Cornwall. In 1972, following Grannie's demise, Steve returned to Cornwall and with Tony and Paul reformed Marvelous Kid. This second incarnation of the band marked the debut of bass guitarist and vocalist Frank Artés, who had been playing with bands in Exeter, and tenor sax and flute player Ivor Carroll who'd spent time in the New York jazz scene studying with Sonny Rollins. This line up began preparing a set of original material in a Cornish country cottage. In 1973, the band travelled to Dublin to record songs for a proposed first album. Following this, and after some farewell gigs in Cornwall, the band decamped to a large house in Walton-on-Thames where they continued writing new material and began gigging on the London live music circuit. This first Marvelous Kid CD contains five of the tracks recorded in the Dublin sessions.
Kernowbeat
Tracks
1. The John And Valerie Music (Steve Betts) - 12:10
2. One For Sebastian (Tony Coxon) - 4:27
3. After The Race (Tony Coxon) - 13:11
4. Instructions For Travellers (Steve Betts, Tony Coxon) - 15:18
5. Katherine (Steve Betts) - 9:56

Marvelous Kid
*Ivor Carroll - Tenor Saxophone, Flute 
*Frank Artés - Bass, Vocal
*Tony Coxon - Guitar
*Paul Moon - Drums
*Steve Betts - Lead Vocal, Keyboards

Thursday, December 12, 2024

The Hamburg Scene - 8 Days In April (1972 germany, remarkable prog blues krautrock)



Jean-Jacques Kravetz a classically trained keyboardist-extraordinaire and veteran of such Deutschrock mammoths as Atlantis, Frumpy, Lindenberg, Randy Pie, recorded a little-known solo album in 1972, aided and abetted by his erstwhile partner Udo Lindenberg (later a solo star in his own right) on drums and percussion, simply titled, "Kravetz", and re-released as "The Hamburg Scene - 8 Days In April". It's indeed a strange mixture side one strives to be "conceptual", comprised of just two long tracks I'd Like To Be A Child Again" (with Inga Rumpf guesting on vocals) clocks in at nearly 10 minutes and is surprisingly light on keyboards and heavy on guitar! Side two is much more streamlined with three shorter tracks, featuring some straight-ahead early 70s style heavy rock, gorgeous guitar and organ passages and even some "weird" (avant-garde?) moments, a-la King Crimson.
by Alex Gitlin, November 2001
Tracks
1. I'd Like To Be A Child Again (Jean-Jacques Kravetz, Udo Lindenberg) (9:35)
2. Ann Toomuch (Jean-Jacques Kravetz, Udo Lindenberg) (7:55)
3. Routes (Udo Lindenberg) (7:27)
4. When The Dream Is Over (Udo Lindenberg) (3:14)
5. Master Of Time (Udo Lindenberg) (9:40)

Personnel
*Udo Lindenberg - Vocals, Drums, Percussion
*Jean-Jacques Kravetz - Organ, Piano, Synthesizer, Percussion
*Steffi Stephan - Bass
*Thomas Kretzschmer - Guitar
*Inga Rumpf - Vocals
*Roger Hook - 12 String Guitar

Related Acts
1972 Atlantis - Atlantis
1970  Frumpy - All Will Be Changed (2008 remaster with extra tracks)
1971  Frumpy - Frumpy II
1972  Frumpy - By The Way